- 4—The Daily Collegian Monday, April 13, 1981 F • IMIto English firemen patrol a street in the Brixton area of South London yesterday after Saturday night's riots, in which 97 policemen were injured and 70 people were arrested. Shops and homes were looted and a school was set on fire during the disturbance. UMW tells industry: give in' •• By The Associated Press members went on strike March 27 when the old contract United Mine Workeis officials' said yesterday the coal expired. • industry must give in to the union's contract demands or coal Scattered picketing continued yesterday, but the coalfields . . miners will stay on strike. were quiet following earlier reports of violence in Kentucky, Negotiators for the Bituminous Coal Operators Association Ohio and Virginia. ' and the UMW have agreed to resume talks tomorrow in UMW officials said the industry must make three key Washington. changes in its proposal before the Bargaining Council accepts "I'm not too optimistic" about an early end to the 18-day-old another contract to send to the rank and file for ratification. strike, said Ed Bell, president of UMW District 6 in Ohio and Jack Perry, president of Charleston, W.Va.-based District northern West Virginia. 17, said the $1.90 a ton royalty on non-union coal processed by UMW companies must be reinstated, the language dealing with - ' • leasing and subleasing of mines needs strengthening to spell out UMW jurisdiction, and a 45-day probationary period for . • :' 'The miners want the right working new employees will have to be dropped. The royalty money goes into the union's health and retirement fund. ; - situation. They're not . going to settle "Unless he (Brown) makes those changes, it will be an :" for the stuff that came back last , exercise in futility," Perry said. "Meeting and negotiating are two different things. There might be exchange, but whether it's time.' . . fruitful or not would be another matter. The proposal sent down • ' was rejected in a fashion that indicates changes need to be made." • —Bill Compton, president of Local 2264= in Pike County, Ky. Bill Compton, president of Local 2264 in Pike County, Ky., agreed: "The miners want the right working situation. They're not going to settle for the stuff that came back last time." Burdette Crowe, president of District 31 at Fairmont, W.Va., said that if the BCOA remains firm during the talks, the strike A similar opinion was expressed Saturday by B.R. Brown, will dragon. But, he added, "I'm hopeful, of course; that it isn't head negotiator for the BCOA: ' .. , . • ~. -, ~ - „,,,. , ...,.„, - . 41 . , , ,,, 1 , ,,..,-, , , , . . sOp . ROhla§jOng 195 , 1,,drawn out. President Church is hopeful, : ' ne.4 o esyi l i o f talks , is tykoffrit,W 4,40k0du404 ii . , ~*9 j)_ 1 1.: ~, „4 , it,' , 11,,,,' ier A when UMW mentheiri. defeated iii -41. :4 1 4iirw , pill iiii:?; , trk),:wn§il4no 'agreed o resume talks after Church told him contigThidieil Iiy;UMW pri4l4,Sjiiii 044441 , 0,6 mm ed‘ 44,00.4! several itois to discuss. "He's got a long string • by the union's Bargaining Council. The union's 160,000 active of issues," Brown said, declining to elaborate. , , ian • • state natloh/W 0 1(1, - .. colleg Papers say U.S. crew negligent Iy RICHARD PYLE . men of the 6,800-ton submarine USS nese government there was no 'cause for Associated Press Writer, George Washington "failed to show concern" about possible radioactive • TOKYO (AP) Japanese n ewspapers seamanship" after the sub collided with leakage from the submarine, which is charged yesterday that a 'U.S. nuclear the freighter Nissho Maru last Thursday. equipped to carry nuclear r •tipped Polaris submarine crew acted irresponSibly by The Nissho Maru survivors said the missiles. not trying to rescue Japanese survivors submarine surfaced soon after the colli- • Mainichi newspaper said yesterday of a cargo ship after the two craft col- sion, but submerged again and vanished, that Japan was "caught in the midst of Tided in the East China Sea. A U.S. propellor-driven plane circled the severe struggles between the naval U.S. officials have conveyed their apol- 'twice overhead but also failed to respond. forces of the two giant nuclear powers ogies for the accident and reported that , to their distress signals, they said. ( th e United States and the Soviet Union) an initial search for survivors yielded The collision in heavily traveled ship- in the Pacific Ocean. " nothing. They ~also said there was no ping lanes 110 miles off the southern tip radiation leakage. . of Japan split the hull of the 2,350-ton Last August a mysterious fire disabled The Yorniuri newspaper called it "de- freighter, which sank within 15 minutes, a Soviet nuclear submarine off of Okina plorable" and "incomprehensible" that survivors said. The ship's captain and wa, killing nine crewmen. the U.S. Navy did not report the collision chief engineer apparently drowned after A Defense Agency spokesman reported to Japanese authorities for almost 36 the accident, and 13 crewmen were res- Sunday that five Soviet naval ships were hours. It suggested the delay may have cued by a Japanese destroyer after seen cruising northward about 90 miles contributed to the apparent deaths of the spending 20 hours in rubber life rafts. southwest of Okinawa. The ships, spotted freighter's captain and one crewman, U.S. Navy spokesmen said the subma- by a patrol plane, were believed heading missing since the accident Thursday. rine reported the collision and surfaced, for the Soviet port. of Vladivostok or It called the subfflarine's action "hit- but did not see the ship or survivors Vietnam, the agency spokesman said. and-run," and said it was contrary to because of fog and rain. In Moscow, the official Soviet news "the spirit of fair play respected' by the U.S. Ambassador• Mike Mansfield pre- agency Tass said "a wave of indignation American people." sented a formal apology Saturday at the in Japan has been aroused by the piratic The Tokyo daily Asahi said the crew- Poreign Ministry and assured the Japa- actions of the U.S. submarine." .. News Briefs Brady's recover called 'brighter' WASHINGTON (UPI) White House Press Secretary James Brady, recov ering from a gunshot wound in the head, yesterday "appeared a little brighter . . . and continues to recover satisfactorily," his doctors said. Brady, 40, was hit by a bullet in the March 30 assassination attempt on Pre sidnt Reagan. He was expected to re main in George Washington University Medical Center for another month or so. His doetors said he had no temperature yesterday and there are "no signs of any complications." Former Nazi close to death, son says BERLIN (UPI) Former Nazi leader Rudolph Hess, the one-time deputy and private secretary to Adolf Hitler, is se riously ill with pneumonia but the Allied powers refuse to reveal his true condi tion, his son said yesterday. Wolf Ruediger Hero, a Munich ar chitect, said the condition of his 86-year old father had so deteriorated that he . -.., . 24...4...* I r. ; ~ . ..,: "' ;:,,e. f,l: tArw ~.. ~... ~ ..,,. . .."."; ... was near death over the weekend. The young Hess accused. the Ameri cans, British, French and Russians who run the Spandau war crimes prison of concealing the gravity of his father's illness. He said he did not trust Allied reports of his father's condition, and would try to get into Berlin's British military hospital today to see him. Hess, the last remaining inmate of Spandau, is allowed only one visitor a month, usually his wife Ilse. Hess, who will be 87 on April 26, was taken to the hospital April 7 from Span dau, where he is serving a life term. "I have received reliable information that my father's condition deteriorated so much that on Saturday it was feared he would not survive the day," the son said in telegrams sent yesterday to the British hospital, the prison and to Ber lin's American commander. When Hess was taken to the hospital April 7, the four powers said it was for "routine medical checks." Three days later they admitted he had had the flu, which developed into pneumonia in the right lung. They said then there was no crisis and Hess was responding to treat ment. 1%.0 UtP.:4 • , "re .73 1 t ite,4„kaw- 11•4 ' /PvIk.101:.(t. , v 't. +i.~~~n i S .r .$ .4 Hinson's resignation takes effect today JACKSON, Miss. (AP) Rep. Jon Hinson's resignation from office because of his arrest on a sodomy charge in a Washington restroom becomes effective at the close of congressional business today. Mississippi's 4th District will be with out representation in the House of Rep resentatives until a special election June 23 to choose someone to fill out the 21 months left in the Republican congress man's term. Hinson sent a 26-word note to Gov. William Winter March 13, notifying him of his intention to resign because of the arrest Feb. 4. Hinson later pleaded inno cent to a reduced misdemeanor charge of attempted oral sodomy. Titanic chinaware stolen from museum LOS ANGELES (AP) The only known piece of china recovered from the sunken Titanic was stolen during an exhibit marking the 69th anniversary of the sinking of the liner, an official said Riots continue in By ED BLANCHE warned, "The trouble is off the streets Associated Press Writer for the moment, but this area is seething. LONDON (AP) Violent clashes be- Feeling against the police is running tween blacks and police erupted yester- very high." day for the second straight night in the In Saturday night's riots, some 40 vehi- Brixton district of south London, hours ties were set afire, including several after police sealed off the burned and police - cars. Police said nearly every looted neighborhood and angry youths store and business in central Brixton was jeered touring Home Secretary William damaged or destroyed and scores of Whitelaw. businesses were looted. Thirty buildings, A police spokesman said the rioters' including a department store, a church, a were attacking police "with anything school and two bars, were completely they can get their hands on" and de- gutted. scribed the clashes as "very violent." Witnesses said the violence occurred The new fighting broke out after more after two white detectives stopped and than 1,000 police officers cordoned off searched a black taxi driver in Brixton's much of the working-class district follow- Ftailton Road, known locally as "the ing Saturday's violence, among the worst front line" after earlier clashes. between racial violence to erupt in Britain since blacks=and London's overwhelmingly World War IL • white police force. Scotland Yard said at least 194 people, Rene Webb, a West Indian who is a 165 of them pence, were injured by rocks, former chairman of Lambeth Commu gasoline bombs and bottles hurled in nity Relations Council, said, "This has running street battles and attacks on set the cause of race relations in south police, medics and firemen. London back 20 years. These kids are Angry young blacks screamed "Sieg furious with the police and will carry on Heil" and gave clenched-fist salutes as until the cops go home." Whitelaw toured the smoldering and rub- London Police Commissioner Sir Da ble-strewn streets ringed by a posse of vid McNee claimed that "troublemakers police officers earlier in the day. from elsewhere" provoked the worst of A grim -faced Whitelaw voiced "ex- the violence. treme distress and horrer" at the six But non-white community leaders said hours of fierce rioting that ripped the unrest was caused by "heavy-handed through the rundown ghetto Saturday tactics" by - police. "Brixton has been night. walking the knife-edge for some time," Leaders in the community, largely said Courtney Laws of the Brixton Neigh populated by West Indians, had pre- borhood Community Association. dieted the heavy police presence would Laws added, "I saw no evidence of provoke new violence. outside political• extremists, but I Police officers, including units from wouldn't be so naive as to say that none the crack Special Patrol Group fast-reac- of these young people were not politically tion force, sealed off a six-block zone motivated." where the worst of the violence occurred, Community relations officials said the halting all traffic into the area. rioting in Brixton was among the worst A West Indian community leader since large-scale non-white immigration UPI wlrophoto Liberia marks coup date By SUSAN LINNEE nation .in 1980 to almost $24 million, and ment'officials were shot by a firing squad' , Adsociated Press Writer has allocated almost $33 million in aid for shortly afterward. MONROVIA, Liberia (AP) Master 1:•:1. Sgt. Samuel K. Doe, Africa's youngest Sawyer, a former candidate for mayor . , head of state, marked the first anniver- Doe, 29, named Liberian University of Monrovia, had previously challenged a nary yesterday of his successful coup by Professor Amos Sawyer to head a 25- clause in the old constitution that made authorizing the creation of a new consti- member commission to draft a constitu- property ownership a requirement for tution and the release of 19 political tion to replace the one he said favored the voter eligibility. The clause autornatical prisoners. former ruling descendentS of freed ly excluded the-majority tribal AfricanS American slaves who founded Liberia in in favor of the Americo-Liberians, who In an anniversary speech, Doe also 1882. represent about 5 percent Of Liberia's 1.8 - 'A. singled out the United States for "special • million population. '-'' thanks" for what he termed "unprece- Doe suspended the constitution after he dented" assistance to his young govern- and 16 fellow enlisted men overthrew the Doe extended an invitation to all "well- •:: ment. government of President Williani, Tol- • intentioned" Liberians to return home, bert Jr. on April 12, 1980 following an apparent reference to the estimated The United States . more than doubled months of sporadic food riots. Tolbert 6,000 Americo-Liberians who reportedly : its overall assistance to this West African . was killed during the coup and 13 govern- fled the country after the coup. Maxim Shostakovich, 42, son of the late Soviet composer Dimitri Shosta kovich, has defected to the West and asked for political asylum, police in Fuerth, West Germany, said. yesterday. The demitasse saucer, about 4 inches in diameter and worth between $20,000 and $25,000, was taken from its glass case Saturday night while about 200 people were at a presentation sponsored by the Oceanic • Navigation Research Society, Charles Sachs, its president and founder, said. Sachs said the piece was the "high light" display among a variety of mem orabilia, and belonged Barrie R. Davis, one of the society's officers. A theft report was filed with the Los Angeles Police Department's Central Division. "It is a tragic loss for maritime histori ans," Sachs said. There was no guard watching the case, he said, adding, "We thought the exhibit case, with a heavy glass cover, would be sufficient. We didn't think anyone would steal it." Sachs said the saucer was saved by a dining steward who was setting ,the breakfast table in the first-class section and put it in his pocket when the first alarm was sounded. The piece has gold and turquoise trim and in the center has "White Star Line" in gold lettering. White Star was the British company that owned the steam er. Army official asks for poison gas use FORT McCLELLAN, Alit. (AP) The head of the Army's Chemical School at Fat McClellan has asked for permission to use real poison gas in training soldiers to protect themselves against chemical warfare. Brig. Gen. Gerald G. Watson said in an interview published yesterday , in The Birmingham News that since the school was re-established in 1979, about 5,000 soldiers have been trained to protect themselves from poison gas by using smoke or other agents, such as tear gas. But Watson says the training is not realistic enough and that soldiers will not have confidence in their own skills and equipment on the battleground if they don't prove them on the training ground. He said soldiers used to train with real gas and chemicals: He is proposing a training center, at an estimated cost of $5 million, that would include a double-walled building de signed to keep the gases from escaping into the atmosphere. Lt. Col. Roland R. Holcomb, assistant commandant of the Chemical School, said that even if all of the facility's chemicals escaped, no one off the base LondOn.:::. • began in 1948. The last major racially related rioting in Britain.occurredin southwestern port city of Bristol in April . 1980. • But there has been trouble in a dozen British cities• in recent months as racial tension worsened with growing tuiem ployment. Blacks leaders charge there ' has been an upsurge of police ha 7, rassment and assaults on blacks. Community leaders have predicted foF, ‘ . months that violence would erupt Brixton, a rundown ghetto area where . .. half the young blacks are unOmployed,- housing is poor and street crime is rising sharply. "Over the last few years things have beeli boiling up until it just boiled over,"; declared Laws, one of Brixton's most.. respected ' black leaders. "What hap- pened was the culmination of issues of frustration, unemployment, homelesd, snags, alienation p and confrontation with the police." There are 1.9 million non-whites Britain, about 3.2 percent of the 56 mit- lion population Tension was already high in Brixton after police clashed with 100 yOungel, blacks there Friday when patrolmen.l , : picked up a West Indian who had been .v stabbed. Police responded by moving in re='' ` • including units of the Spe-' cial Patrol Group, a mobile 1,000-man 5 ' force used to quell riots and sweep high crime areas. Ted Knight, leader of Lambeth Bo: rough Council which controls Brixton, o warned last January that relations ber.,,, tween blacks and police were at "break-.."; ing point" because of "police, intimkilition and police, assaults." would face serious danger because of the small quantities involved. . "If everything turned loose, the 0n1y , . - . person who would be killed would be (the one) in the bUilding.with it,?' Holcomb,:y, said. Inmates take over • South Bend , Ind. jail SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) -- About inmates seized control of the St. Joseph , County Jail yesterday, held a jail guard :4`.:. and and matron hostage for three hours and raped two women prisoners. • Police stormed the jail to end the uprising. . The two women prisoners were hospi-t talized. No other injuries were reported. The inmates seized the second floor : cell block of the jail at about 7 'a.m. ! yesterday, police said. A matron on the floor, Marty Lynch, and a guard, Robert ; Cressy, were taken hostage. • The inmates demanded better food and :.- conditions, improved visitation rights ; and longer phone calls. ' St. Joseph County police and South 42; Bend police SWAT teams stormed the ; jail with police dogs at about 10:15 a.m., : r securing:the building. County Prosecutor Michael Barnes said criminal charges may be filed against the prisoners involved in the*:: / :1 . : uprising. .; . • A horse, my kingdom for a horse By TODD LIGHTY Daily Collegian Staff Writer Arms raised high in the air, the warrior moves in for the final kill. Crash! He knocks his opponent to the ground with one Il *massive blow of his sword. The warrior's prey lies motionless on the' ground. But in just a few seconds the warrior's opponent is back on his feet and ready to start another round of intense combat. ' This is' only one of the many strange sights beheld on the HUB Lawn on warm. Sunday afternoons: • The Society for Creative Anachronism, which sponsors the * • Siinday battles, is an educational organization that combines its members' talents and fantasies to recreate the Middle Ages and the European, Asian and African renaissances. Members of the organization try to create pre-1650 persona ' in i an attempt to present themselves as ficticious medieval characters. They act, feel and dress as medieval people. • One of the group's most popular events is warrior combat. The warriors, dressed in medieval garb and wearing protective 4 7 armor, are equipped with makeshift swords and wooden axes or maces. The warriors' attire is designed to imitate the country he or she represents. The costumes can weigh up to 40 pounds and can cost anywhere from $2O-$2,000. Before each battle, the marshall, who officiates the fight, • reads the rules to the combatants. o 'Honor your opponent. Honor the crowd," the marshall says. "To the love of the shire and to the glory of the crown, commence fighting." Immediately, the two warriors approach each other, danc ing and yelling, as they jockey for position to make a kill; a blow that is hard, crisp and to one of the vital areas of a warrior. • 0 The warriors swing, poke, jab and slice frantically at one another. When one of the warriors is dealt a severe blow, which is determined by the marshal], he or she must lie on the ground Photo mukluk° in defeat and the suspense-filled battle is over. , Terry Crain (10th-markethig), right, stalks his opponent Ruth E. Mallette (graduate-geologY) , , who is known by the Charlie Dixon in a simulated broadsword battle on the HUB society as Sheila Kincaid, said occasionally one of the members lawn. gets hurt when fighting. But she said it's never worse than a broken finger or cracked rib. the dissimilarities between the people of the Middle Ages. He 40 • "As the guyi say, it's less dangerous than football," Mal- said this is an attempt to show 'the members of different lette said. "However, sometimes the warriors get mad at each countries that they are not at all alike. other. Part of the thing we stress is chivalry and not getting "I've met some strange people in the society," Moyer said. mad at your 'Opponent." "To want to join the society, you have to be slightly schizoid and Beth A. Mallette (sth-theater and costume design) alais slightly romantic. The whole point of the society is to give you a Anna Elzevir, said the battles are confrontations to teach the chance to live out your fantasies." members skills. Moyer 'said his favorite activity for the society involves "At times it's' a comic routine," Beth Mallette said. "It's "drinking and wenching." just a lot of fun." "Some people may think we are weird," Moyer said. "But The society is divided into six kingdoms throughout the could you imagine if just only one of us would do this? They'd United States and Canada, with membership totaling 3,000 or lock you up. But when a lot of people are doing the same thing, 4,000 people, she said. And the membership continues to grow it becomes an event." rapidly. Snow Shoe resident Charles S. Dixon, administrator of the Ross Moyer, a radio sales manager from Williamsport, said local chapter of the society, said the area organization is *the fighting in battle exists oil' an honor system. becoming a major power in the East Kingdom, with boundaries :He stressed / that the society researches and practices music, from Maine to Northern Maryland. poetry, calligraphy, cooking, dancing and brewing. Dixon, who is referred to as Koimaker Ul Fshofuth in the 'Moyer, who calls himself Muhammad Osman al'Kloreshi, society, said he became interested in the society partly because • said the members tease each other to recreate and to establish he watched too many medieval movies. 4 I I VI .1 - I I lIIU $2.00 off any I IS 16", 3or more item pizza expires: 4/18/81 I DI i3u) z Es' N oN I I= um ma mil ma am mu mai mm am mm am ma ma ma am mm =No En a ANNOUNCING AN INNOVATIVE MASTERS EMPHASIS IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE An innovative program of paid work and graduate study leading to a M.S. degree in Community Systems Planning and Development (emphasis in criminal justice) will be discussed at an open meeting • DATE: April 13, 1981 TIME: 3:00 p.m.. PLACE: S-204 Fatt, Free Delivery I 421 E. Beaver I Phone: 234.5655 I 10 look * et * * * *4* 't * *lc* 21010 10 ft lookok *44* * THE WOMEN OF KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Si * * PROUDLY ANNOUNCE THEIR 1981 SPRING INITIATES * - * * MARY ELIZABETH KANE JULIE MARIE MELIN* 4') * * * • : AND ALSO WISH TO WELCOME THEIR NEW KEYMEN : * * * BRIAN DAMIANI DOUG MOORE 43•• * RANDY MILLAR ANDY NACHAMIE* * !g. U -030 * R . e t . ** **IC 1 0 f * " * " 4 o 14 1 0 1 0 * 1 *MO ** Ol .3 1 0 1444* 13/0 AT THE TRAIN STATION COMMISSARY Junction of College & Sowers 237-5873 Kepford: Met Ed lied about TMI Utility made 'amazing' assumptions during accident Continued from Page 1. more open with the public. Yet the agen- - you see that all leading? It was very difficult for anyone to, get cy is moving in exactly the opposite KEPFORD: If they're not in check, I any information because of the continu- directkop, think they lead to a societal collapse or a ing string of lies put out by Metropolitian COLLEGIAN: Do you see• any of the nuclear war. lam absolutely flabber- Edison Company in order to protect its energy companies developing solar en- gasted that these suppossedly responsi overinflated public relations image. ergy. to an economically feasible alterna- ble professors at this University have This policy (of lying) is really support- tive for a large number of people? such a nonexistent notion of what the ed by the NRC. We are are still involved KEPFORD: I support solar energy to consequences of exponential growth are. In the TMI 1 restart hearings. One of the issues we tried to raise was that there is • no mechanism in the plans to insure that the public gets honest, factual and timely 'The NRC, and this is one thing that really bothers information. The NRC would not allow us to litigate that issue. They did not want ' me about the NRC, since the TMI accident they that issue examined publicly. have moved a long way towards simply cutting the In • the evacuation plans for the five counties adjoining TMI that might be public off from information about the nuclear threatened by an accident, there were some amazing assumptions. For Harris- program.' burg there was the asssumption that there would be a 48 hour warning period prior to the need for evacuation so people could get ready. We asked if for someone to take ,the stand and be able to defend that kind of the extent that it's not monopolized, to Granted, these people have been sub assumption. The licensing board refused the extent that it is small, decentralized jected to training in physics and math for to allow us to question those assump- use of solar power, non-large scale. The many years. I'm really appalled that Lions. economics of public utilities is such that their education has been so woefully If there was, if there had ever been, or with very few exceptions, 'it's in the inadequate that they can't recongize that if there ever will be a fully open hearing economic interest of the utilities to sup- exponential growth greater than zero, with full access to information and fair ply the most expensive, capital intensive over long periods of time, is simply • judges, no nuclear power plant would generating facilities they can. unsustainable. It cannot go on. There is ever be licensed. The ideal uses of solar energy are no way to do it when you have finite COLLEGIAN: Why do you say that? small scale. I would hope that these resources when we live in a finite KEPFORD: The NRC, and this is one never become monopolized. I would hope world when we do. thing that really bothers me about the that they really are allowed to become COLLEGIAN:' Reagan has not really NRC, since the TMI accident they have truly democratic. talked about, energy and he hasn't talked moved a long way towards simply cut- COLLEGIAN: What impact does the about conservation. Do you think conser ting the public off from information Reagan administration have on energy vation and energy problems are still on about the nuclear program. issues? the minds of Americans? We have gotten proposed changes in KEPFORD: If one had to pick a set of KEPFORD: In a lot of ways yes. In a the rules of practice which would seal the strategies that would have the most lot of ways no. As fuel bills skyrocket, NRC off from not only providing infor- devastating effect on the country, you which they will, as electricity prices mation but also providing witnesses who would come pretty close to what the skyrocket, which they will when the high can give relevant testimony. Reagan administration is proposing. cost nuclear plants come on line, people There is one precess called discovery, They have cut funds for solar energy and will be forced to conserve more, but whereby you identify information you conservation is a dirty word because there is no assurance that their rates would like to inspect it is relevant to the there is no profit in conservation except won't be raised even more to pay for proceeding. By these new rules the NRC for people: these outrageously expensive plants that would not permit discovery upon the The situation has been aptly described were never needed in the first place. NRC staff. You could inspect no doucu- some years ago by David Brower from But the other side, there is still a push ments nor can you ask the NRC staff to Friends of the Earth as a policy of in a lot of states to get rid of the 55 miles answer any questions under oath. They 'Strength through exhaustion.' I don't per-hour speed limit. It's really the anti can refuse. know how better to describe it. thesis of conservation to roar across The various bodies that studied the COLLEGIAN: In your speeches during Texas at 85 miles-per-hour. If we had an accident a TMI all found that there were Eco-Action's Nuclear Awareness Week, infinite supply of petroleum and gaso serious attitude problems within the you talked about exponential growth and line, there may be some justification for NRC staff, that the agency should be exponential uses of fossil fuel. Where do that, but of course there isn't .1 - •••••••••#404••••••••••••••~••••••••, "VISIT DAIRY QUEEN FOR LUNCH% • ' - (and save $O4, • '`LET'S ALL GO TO • . • 0 t DAIRY QUEEN" THIS WEEK ONLY, GET: .: A HOT DOG • •• • •', •A BAG OF CHIPS • • & A SMALL DRINK C • I FOR ONLY 0 ' 0 ...=MMIIIMMII. OFFER GOOD APRILS -APRIL 22 .. • - FROM 11 - 5 P.M. 0• ' 0 • SALE ONLY AT: • . • 4 BOLLER'SDAIRY QUEEN to • .• CALDER SQUARE 4 • Hours: Mon.-Sat: 11:00 to 11:00 • • • Sunday 12:00 to 11:00 • 4 VIN "101P..41.00•0•40••••••••••••••••••••11-4elt The Daily Collegian Monday, April 13, 1901— —Chauncy Kepford